When actresses begin parading on the Emmy red carpet Sunday, they will be glamorously gowned and coiffed — and it will be no accident that their skin glows and makeup looks perfect for the cameras. It can take a village of experts and weeks of planning to get the look right.

That village is Los Angeles, home to an A-list of makeup artists, dermatologists and estheticians who can get the job done with award-worthy results. And since awards season seems to have stretched into an almost endless cycle of film, stage, television and music events — and become a global cultural phenomenon along the way — red carpet beauty has sparked a mini-industry of specialty treatments and products designed to give those watching at home the possibility of looking like Debra Messing or Zoe Saldana. It's been a boon for the experts behind the treatments too.

For instance, Lorac founder and makeup artist Carol Shaw (whose red carpet clients include Messing and Saldana as well as Nicole Kidman) offers products such as Close Up: Real Life to Red Carpet Eye Tutorial ($36), a collection of eye products with instructions that can be purchased at Sephora. Dermatologist Dr. Harold Lancer ( Victoria Beckham is a client) offers the Red Carpet Flash Facial ($250) in his office in Beverly Hills. Carasoin Spa in L.A. offers the Red Carpet Quintessential Facial ($250). In New York, Tracie Martyn of the eponymous skin-care salon offers a Red Carpet Facial (the in-salon treatment costs a whopping $450).

Some of the experts behind such treatments have reached demi-celebrity status of their own. Here are the stories of a few who've made it big in the beauty world.

Replicate at home: For special occasions, Dubroff advises going for a polished look but not trying new trends for the first time. You should highlight your best feature but don't load on too much foundation. And know that your look will require some upkeep, with occasional touch-ups throughout the night.

Dubroff's story: "I knew when I was 10 that I was going to be a makeup artist," she says. "I was that girl in front of my mother's makeup mirror all of the time begging anyone to let me put makeup on their face." She did makeup for school plays and as a teenager began noticing magazines' photographer and makeup artist credits. "Straight out of high school I set my sights on going to New York City to be a makeup artist, and that's exactly what I did," Dubroff says. Francois Nars, of Nars Cosmetics, hired her as his assistant and more work followed. She moved to L.A. in 2001, but says that in the 1990s there was a bias against West Coast makeup artists, and a favoritism shown to those in New York, who worked with many of the top models. Then celebrities began taking over magazine covers. "And actresses started bringing in their [makeup artists] whom they trusted — and those are the people who are getting the great editorial and advertising campaigns," she says. Soon after she arrived in Los Angeles, famed photographer Annie Leibovitz hired her to work on a Vanity Fair Hollywood cover. It's been the A-list for Dubroff ever since: the most prestigious magazines, ad campaigns and red carpet celebrity clients.

Beauty philosophy: "Beauty starts with health, well-being and lifestyle. Taking the best possible care of this one body that we have in this lifetime and treating it as a temple — that's where beauty stems from — love for self," she says. "And when it comes to makeup trends — they can be fun, but know and embrace what works for you."

Signature red carpet treatments: Wu says that award show nominees, presenters and attendees start having their appointments at least one month before the event, starting with the Affirm laser treatment, which combats the effects of sun damage, smoothes skin and makes it glow. Two weeks before, they come in for Botox injections and fillers, but in small amounts so they don't look drastically different than usual. Five to seven days before, they have a light peel. And she says her patients have her number on speed dial for last-minute award season skin emergencies, such as stress pimples, which she combats with cortisone injections.

Replicate at home: Wu suggests exfoliating one to three times a week. Before any big event, she says, stay away from junk food. But include in your diet healthy fats such as salmon, almonds and flaxseed to increase skin's glow. Products Wu likes include Philosophy's Hope in a Jar ($38), Aveeno Positively Radiant Cleansing Pads ($6.49) and Scott Barnes Body Bling ($38). Dr. Jessica Wu Cosmeceuticals Dew Cream ($125) is the top seller in her product line.

Wu's story: "I grew up obsessed with skin-care products and haunting the drugstore aisles because I had terrible teenage acne in junior high," she says. "Finally, my mother took me to a dermatologist." When she went to medical school she decided to help people like herself who didn't know what skin-care options were available. She says that her Harvard Medical School professors told her that she was wasting her medical school education coming to Los Angeles to be a dermatologist when she could instead be curing cancer and doing heart transplants. "But I firmly believe that I am helping people change their lives and helping them look and feel more healthy and beautiful. And that can be as powerful as what my classmates are doing," she says. When Botox was first approved, she vaulted into the spotlight after a Newsweek feature about her practice's use of the treatments. She now gets hundreds of questions from around the world, recently answering an e-mail from a young girl from Katmandu. "I provide patients hope and the information they need to take care of their skin," Wu says.

Signature red carpet treatment: brow shaping, which costs $80 for a first appointment with Soare, or about $45 for an appointment with one of her estheticians. Superstar celebrities include Madonna, Jennifer Lopez and Oprah Winfrey.

Soare's story: She was in art school, studying construction and architecture when someone told her that to change a person's emotion in a painting or sculpture, the artist had only to change the eyebrow shape. A seed was planted. Soare ended up attending beauty school in Romania, came to the United States in 1989 and worked as an esthetician doing facials and body waxing for models. Her work got such great buzz it attracted a Vogue writer whose piece about her for the magazine led to an avalanche of press and clients. Anastasia opened her own Beverly Hills salon in 1996. During award season she sometimes has done celebrities' brows in their limos.

Beauty philosophy: "We women since we were little always want to look like someone else… We have straight hair, we want curly hair; we are blond, we want to be brunette. We are never happy," Anastasia says. "Everyone should embrace who they are.… Do the best you can do with what you have. I believe that every woman is beautiful."

Replicate at home: Kinara's Red Carpet Take Home Kit ($145). This is a three-step peel, neutralizer and mask that exfoliates, diminishes pore size, controls breakouts and increases radiance. Ingredients include lactic acid, argine and green tea.

Lorencin-Northrup's story: She grew up in Belgrade, Yugoslavia. "Beauty has been a part of my life ever since I was a little girl. I started when I was 7 or 8," she says. Lorencin-Northrup remembers making homemade face masks from honey and eggs for herself and her mother. Her passions were politics, philosophy and beauty, but when she immigrated to America, barely speaking English, beauty school was her most practical option. At her first job in Encino, she built her clientele to 350 people in one year. Next she worked at Ole Henriksen, and in 2002 she opened Kinara. She built a solid following but really broke through when Halle Barry raved about her on "Good Morning America," in People and InStyle magazines and elsewhere. "People always call seeing that Halle Berry likes my product, and they say, 'I want to look like that.' It's always a funny conversation," she says.

Beauty philosophy: "Beauty regimens have to be simple but very effective," says Lorencin-Northrup, who advocates separating fads from what really works on your individual skin. "It's about knowledge. And it's about how much love you put into it."

Replicate at home: The DermaLucent and oxygen treatments that are part of the Ultimate Kate are an in-clinic experience. But Somerville's Glow Kit ($265) might be the next best thing. Included are ExfoliKate, which contains physical abrasives and chemical exfoliants; Quench Hydrating Serum with hyaluronic acid; and Deep Tissue Repair, which is rich in peptides for a dewy finish.

Somerville's story: "I played with Barbie a lot when I was little and I always loved making everything around me beautiful — whether it was somebody else or a room," she says. But she was self-conscious about her looks as a child. "I had the biggest buckteeth in the world," she says. "I had frizzy hair when it wasn't in style — I was not a Barbie doll." She also had eczema and was often in dermatologists' offices. "I was really uncomfortable in my own skin," she says, which is what led her to get into the skin-care field. She became a paramedical esthetician working with plastic surgeons and dermatologists. Noticing a void of products that were effective but low in side effects, she hired a cosmetic chemist and started making her own. She opened her own clinic in 2004. Her treatments garnered buzz, and when Paris Hilton and Jessica Alba at the height of their fame credited Kate Somerville as their beauty secret, the media rolled in along with other major celebrities. Paparazzi sometimes sat outside her clinic hoping for a glimpse of one of her star clients. Now her products and treatments are available throughout the country at her clinics, on QVC and at major retailers such as Nordstrom and Sephora. Her book "Complexion Perfection!" was published this spring.

Beauty philosophy: "Natural beauty," she says, not plastic surgery. "The Beverly Hills pulled-back look is not my thing. This is for the woman who wants to stay looking like herself but gorgeous and glowing."